Stefani Carter
Stefani Carter | |
---|---|
Texas State Representative from District 102 (Dallas County) | |
In office 2011–2015 | |
Preceded by | Carol Kent |
Succeeded by | Linda Koop |
Personal details | |
Born | [1] Dallas, Texas, USA | February 15, 1978
Political party | Republican |
Residence(s) | Dallas, Texas |
Alma mater | University of Texas[1] Harvard School of Law[1] |
Occupation | Attorney[1] |
Stefani Carter (born February 15, 1978) is a former member of the Texas House of Representatives from the 102nd District, which included parts of Dallas, and the northern Dallas County suburbs of Garland, and Richardson, Texas.[2] First elected in 2010, Carter made history by becoming the first Republican African-American woman to serve in the Texas House when she unseated the Democratic incumbent Carol Kent.[3][4]
Early life
[edit]Carter was born in Dallas. She is a practicing Roman Catholic and was baptized in Richardson, Texas. Her mother was an elementary school teacher, and her father is an engineer turned entrepreneur, the owner of a small lawn-care company.
Carter excelled academically in school; her parents told her she would have to work her way through college. She graduated in 1996 from Plano East Senior High School and earned a full scholarship to the University of Texas at Austin, where she graduated with highest honors with a Bachelor of Arts in Government and a Bachelor of Science in Journalism. During Carter's undergraduate years at UT she interned at the White House during the Clinton administration.
After UT, Carter graduated with a Juris Doctor degree from Harvard Law School. She also obtained a master's degree in Public Policy from Harvard's John F. Kennedy School of Government. During Carter's years at Harvard, she became a Republican and contributed articles to USA Today. After law school, she returned to Dallas and served Collin County as an assistant district attorney.
Political career
[edit]Carter decided to run for office in the 102nd House District in Texas, taking on Democrat Carol Kent. Carter won by simply pointing to Kent's record as being far too liberal for her area of Dallas and that voters in the district were far more conservative than the person who was representing them.
Carter won in 2010 with 54.63 percent of the vote, having unseated Kent by a ten-point margin of victory.
On November 29, 2016, Carter was named as a Transition Landing Team member [5] for the newly elected President Donald Trump in the Department of Justice.
Election of 2014
[edit]Carter had announced on July 9, 2013 that she would be a candidate for the Texas Railroad Commission in the Place 1 seat vacated by the outgoing incumbent, Barry Smitherman, who ran instead for Texas Attorney General in 2014 to replace the three-term incumbent, Greg Abbott, the 2014 gubernatorial nominee who seeks to succeed the retiring Governor Rick Perry.
However, on October 22, 2013, Carter announced that she was ending her bid for the Railroad Commission and would instead seek reelection to a third two-year term to her state House seat.[6]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d "State Rep. Stefani Carter District 102 (R-Dallas)". Texas Tribune. Retrieved June 26, 2013.
- ^ Texas House of Representatives : Representative Carter, Stefani
- ^ Dallas Morning News - Nov 4, 2010
- ^ PBS
- ^ "Trump=Pence transition team". Dec 10, 2016. Retrieved January 22, 2017.
- ^ "State lawmaker drops out of Railroad Commission race". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved October 23, 2013.
- 1978 births
- Living people
- Republican Party members of the Texas House of Representatives
- Women state legislators in Texas
- African-American Catholics
- African-American state legislators in Texas
- Politicians from Dallas
- Plano East Senior High School alumni
- Moody College of Communication alumni
- Harvard Law School alumni
- Texas lawyers
- Harvard Kennedy School alumni
- 21st-century American legislators
- 21st-century American women politicians
- Catholic politicians from Texas
- 21st-century African-American women politicians
- 21st-century African-American politicians
- 20th-century African-American politicians
- 20th-century African-American women politicians
- 21st-century Texas politicians